
Send your own ideas and suggestions (all listed will be attributed).

In fact usually the humour will come from the audience, when they see the prop on you, or better still when they see one of their colleagues wearing or holding or otherwise showing off an imaginative prop.

Using good and imaginative visual aids brings a talk or presentation to life, and injects a lot of irresistible humour. Smaller props - like fruit and vegetables orĬhocolate snack bars - are fun to pass around the audience, or throw (with due care), more so if the items have interesting shapes, textures, smells, etc. Over-sized props (joke-shop inflatables for example) that you keep with you at the front or on stage can be particularly effective, especially for a big audience for whom a small prop might have less impact. You don't need to buy the real thing - usually children's toy versions or party shop novelties will achieve the same result, and in many cases a better one. The hats and clothing props can be worn by the presenter while making a certain point, or better still given to a training delegate or member of the audience to wear. Here are some simple examples of visual aids to use for various themes and metaphors. Which can create powerful and memorable metaphors. Visual aids, particularly 'props', have a physical presence, texture, feel, perhaps smell also, People remember more of what they are told if the experience is multi-sensory, rather than just listening to spoken words or reading printed words on a screen. The use of good visual aids - especially physical 'props' which people can hold and touch - is one of the best techniques for adding interest, humour and variety to presentations, training, and public speaking. I thought I was adequate, but then I watched this and realized that I am nothing.Visual Aids and Props Ideas Introduction For Presentations, Training Courses Design and Public Speaking Time machine, send this back to 1980 to blow their minds, pls. (Pay attention to his right hand, which keeps reaching off-screen)įilm it from further back so you can see his mate chucking in completed ones and him chucking out non completed ones. That’s a juggling achievement… not a Rubik’s Cube achievement.

Take a look at some of the reactions to the video: The now-viral video has garnered over 7 million views since it was shared. If the man in the video has actually taken just 45 seconds and can replicate it, it could be a new world record. Many also pulled out the video of 13-year-old Que Jianyu from China, who took 5 minutes and 6.61 seconds to set a Guinness World Records title for solving three Rubik’s cubes while juggling. Others also claimed that the man was throwing the cubes out of the frame, where someone else was solving it. Many people responded to the video by calling it a hoax and said it was impossible to do this. The video shows an unidentified man taking 45 seconds to solve the three cubes while juggling.Īll other rubik’s cube achievements are cancelled /圎j7kBb8tc Twitter user shared the video with the caption: “All other Rubik’s cube achievements are cancelled”.
